The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, August 21, 1952, Page 6, Image 6

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    HUCKLEBERRY FINN .
Weekly Fruit and
Nut Crops Review
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
RODEO
Every Nite—Mats
Sunday and Saturday
STATE FAIR
SALEM
SAT.
SAT.
AUG. 30 through SEPT. 6
for
briose
PMfH -
¿HPERORHERO of R ome
TZPEWENED TO CUT OFF THE
TONGUES OF THOSE WHO HESlTDTFD
7D OF INK GOPfTS MILK1
M :: « » KXK.K « « » X K KM
I.i." v von—.on won timi argument without losing
your life"
would result in 10 to 15 per cent larger
offerings of unshelled filberts than
domestic outlets have taken in recent
years.
At the meeting in Portland
last Friday (AugUHt 15), a minority
of the board favored still larger offer­
ings in-shell. But the majority of the
board was concerned with chances that
larger offerings would break the in­
shell market and reduce returns to
growers.
The majority pointed out
that the salable percentage could, with
the approval of the ancestry, be in­
creased later if warranted by trade de­
mand.
This percentage cannot be
lowered later.
The recommendation
is subject to review and modification
by the Secretary of Agriculture before
the set-aside becomes effective. In­
terested parties wishing to submit
SALEM. ORE.
HAULING AND MOVING HEAVY MACHINERY
and Mill Equipment Up To 25 Tons
Inrluding DR and IID14 Cats, and At-yard shovel*.
Complete Rigging Outfit, Winch Trucks, Low-bed Trailers
Pains, distress of "those days” stopped
or amazingly relieved
in 3 out of 4 cases
in doctors’tests)
Ssivntifxally Modern Action
LTNLIKE AUTOMOBILES, A m
AIRPLANE REQUIRES more
FUEL TO F ly slowly
- than at a fast rate
OF SPE-EO
cHE CUS"fOMl$ R SURVIVRU Or
/ÌT OMAHA, NEB.,
?R\MITN6 MARRIAG6 es CPKuRE1
ÍRM MRN WOULD
fl WOMAN
ATt A BOX OF DINAMITE
CARRN HiR RWflN S'/
RNO
TRF BOVINE WAS UNHAßMEO
LPfprrriFUU fRlÉND <0 ACCOMPANY HIM
ho A varo
RïïncKS ohh ? gibus ttiwts!
Salem Phone-:
2-1924 ; Night 2 4*17
Yea! Lydia Pinkham's has
been proved to be scientifically
modern tn action!
This MW« will not surprise
the thousands of women and
girls who take Lydia Pinkham s
regularly and know the relief it
can bring
And it should encourage you
(if you're not taking Lydia
Pinkham s I to see if your ex­
perience doesn't match theirs
.. to see if you. too, don't avoid
IT’S AMAZING!
by Dick Shaw
Salem Heavy Hauling & Equipment Co
• Here's wonderful news for
women and girls who — each
month — suffer the tortures of
"bad days" of functionally-
caused menstrual cramps and
pain — headaches, backaches,
and those "no-good,” dragged-
out feelings.
It's news about a medicine
famous for relieving such suf­
fering !
Here is the exciting news.
Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound — gave complete or
striking relief of such distress
in an average of 3 out of 4 of
the cases in doctors' tests!
August 21. 1952
n Z l IC. RU"
w
Tse UOOa STO«* Aec
Geme Si* pxk S t
ar dSfaerres- v
August 19, 1952
Lower price» for pears, higher
price» for prunes, and a large surplus
of filberts were noted during the past
week, according to the weekly fruit
and nut crops review prepared by the
OSC Extension Service from USDA
reports and other data.
NW I’rocexMors Ooen On Bartlett».
Processors in Portland and Yakima
opened prices on Bartletts during the
second week of August. Prices being
offered were $50 a ton for No. l’s,
2% inches and larger, and for No. 2’«
$32.50 a ton.
Dried Prune Crop Harvest Start«
Harvest of California dried prune
crop got underway in most districts
of the state during the second week of
August.
Producer price ideas were
generally reported strong and only a
few scattered crops have been con­
tracted. Packers have been offering
to buy at firm prices or on open price
contracts with or without minimum
guarantees. Most packer offers, made
on a firm price or as guarantee, were
on a 10-cent basis for size 34/71’s.
This is one cent higher than last year’s
opening price.
It equals the 1950
opening price, when California’s pro­
duction was 9 per cent larger. Most
of Oregon’s Italian prunes grade out
in the basic size range of 34/71’s.
National Hour Cherry Crop Falls
The U. S. Crop Reporting Service
in its August 11 release estimated the
national sour cherry crop to be some­
what smaller than expected in early
June and July. The August estimate
placed production at about 100,000
tons compared to same 140,000 tons
expected a month earlier. Most of
this reduction is due to heavy winds
and rain» in Michigan. That state’s
production was cut nearly one-third.
Estimates have also gone down in New
York, Wisconsin, and most other
states.
Oregon’s sour cherry crop, now esti­
mated at 2,600 tons, is down some 400
tons from the July 1 estimate.
Board Recommends 31% Surplus
The Filbert control board has rec­
ommended that the salable percentage
for this year’s filbert crop be estab 1
lished by the secretary of the USDA
at 6(1 per cent and the surplus per- '
ventage at 34 per cent. The board
estimates that these percentages
1405 N. Front St.
8—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE
Mow Lydia Plnkham'i works
It h*M a calming“ and soofhiny
effect on the uterus . . . QWiriinjy
the contractions i are the chart)
Chat >o often cause menstrual
pain, cramp«, other distress
the nervousness and tension,
weakness, irritability — and
pain—«o often associated with
those days ’!
Remember Lydia Pinkham's,
too — if you're suffering the
"hot flashes" and other func­
tionally-caused distress of
change of life.”
Get Lydia Pinkham’s Com-
wund or new, improved Tab­
lets with added iron (trial size
only 59« I. Start taking Lydia
Pinkham's today?
Needs
AT
NEW RETAIL LOCATION
x
x
«
X
x
X
X
X
X
Kelly Lumber Sales |
East City Limits on Highway 222
Phone 3215
MILL CITY I
Almost three times as large a pro­ K x __
X X ;; x X ;
portion of Linn county people are
without library advantages as in the
state as a whole.
Six of every ten Linn county per­
sons live in ureas without library
service as compared with about two '
in ten (22% to be exact) in Oregon.
The reason for Oregon's better li­
brary coverage is found in the fact
that of the state's 36 counties 13 have .
county libraries. These are Clacka-
I mas, Clatsop, Deschutes, Klamath,
| Multnomah, Tillamook, Hood River,
Jackson, Josephine Lake, Malheur,
Umatilla and Wasco.
The first six of these have book-1
i mobiles. With such a mobile library I
! of a thousand or more volumes, n
county librarian can take books to all
parts of a county, making scheduled >
| stops in rural communities, neighbor­
hood centers, or wherever several fam­
ilies can come to a central point to
select books. Books are also taken
to rural schools and to town libraries.
County support thus provides li­
brary service for rural people living
outside those cities and towns which
already have their own libraries.
Oregon, with such county library
systems in more than a third of its
counties compares favorably with the '
rest of the country. There are 735
county libraries in the 3070 counties
of the U.S.
In the state of Washington, 17 of
the 39 counties have county library
service, all started within the past
ten years; all but three have book­
mobile«. some large counties more
than one. California, a pioneer it.
the movement, now has 52 county li­
braries.
X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X XÏX 3
All Building Supply
views on the Control Board’s recom
mendation may file their arguments
with the Fruits and Vegetable branch
of the Production and Marketing Ad­
ministration in Washington, D.C.
Linn County People
Without Libraries
:
4
/
*
_____ ______
______ -
x x x x x x x x x x x x.x.x x X :: x x x x X x x x x x x x x :: x X x x x x x x ■■■ X X x x x x
I
THE COMMERCIAL BOOK STORE
SAIJCM
1*1 N. Commercial St.
Ha« Everything for Your
OFFICE NEEDS
Furniture and Bookkeeping Supplies
'HU'
Never
a Dull Moment
“At the Bottom of the Hill"
MILL CITY TAVERN
tBOiinmn mi ut irn nu su mi t.^uxr
I
II
QUESTION: Our wall« are finished in a
texture paint finish with a stippled surface.
We would like to remove this lor papering.
Can you tell the best way to go about it?
-J. J. B . Woodside, N. Y.
ANSWER: Unless covered with waterproof
paint, the surface can be well soaked, scraped
as nearly level as possible, and when it has
dried, sanded smooth. A power sanding ma­
chine used on the dry wall will accomplish
the same purpose. In both cases, fill remaining
depressions with spackling compound to level
the wall (or paper.
QUESTION: My house, stuccoed with a
scratch coat and an outside coat of %-inch
white sand and cement, has broken at the
chimney and two corners. I’ve had this fixed
once, but it has broken off again. Can you
offer any solution?
-J N., Carbon. W. Va.
ANSWER: Stucco repairs often fail due to
application of stucco to oily or dirty surfaces.
Best way is to apply strips of metal lath to
the broken area, anchoring them to the ma­
sonry, then applying new stucco to this lath.
QUESTION: I added a room to my brick
home, but could not match the shingle«. Could
you tell me where 1 can get a «tain to match
the asphalt shingles on the rest of the house?
—T. W., Salt Lake City, Utah
ANSWER: Neither water nor oil stains are
apt to penetrate waterproof asphalt shingles —
at least with any degree of permanence. Paint
that would adhere and color would also be
quite conspicuous — probably worse than no
stain at all.
♦
QUESTION : Would painting the bare wood
with aluminum paint before I put up insula­
tion improve its effectiveness?
-E. A. B.» Chicago, III
ANSWER. While aluminum paint does pro­
vide a certain amount of heat-reflective qual­
ity, it cannot be accurately measured when
so applied. Regular foil insulation leflects a
measurable 90% by tests, making further
treatment unnecessary.
Thia column is prepared by the edi­
tors of THE FAMILY HANDYMAN
MAGAZINE as a service to home
owners. If you have any questions or
problems relating to your own home,
please address a letter, stating your
problem to THE FAMILY HANDY-
MAN. 211 East 37th Street. New
York. New York, Attention of News
Syndicate Editor. If the question has
widespread appeal in the opinion of
the editors, it will be printed with the
answer m this column at a later date.
However, we cannot enter into detailed
correspondence with everyone. THE
FAMILY HANDYMAN is available
at newsstands and hardware stores
everywhere.
HI Hit'b' H HKÜH.ini UR UHI IM WH MHUi MH MHIIMI MI Wt AU Kl MUH UUdiflYHH
$30,000.00
REVIEW
Even Nite
State Fair
SALEM
SAT.
30 through SEPT, »i
fl
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